GRB 980425 host: [CII], [OI] and CO lines reveal recent enhancement of star formation due to atomic gas inflow
Micha{\l} J. Micha{\l}owski (IfA, Edinburgh), J. M. Castro Ceron, J., L. Wardlow, A. Karska, H. Messias, P. van der Werf, L. K. Hunt, M. Baes, A., J. Castro-Tirado, G. Gentile, J. Hjorth, E. Le Floc'h, R. Perez Martinez, A., Nicuesa Guelbenzu, J. Rasmussen, J. R. Rizzo, A. Rossi

TL;DR
This study uses FIR line observations of the GRB 980425 host galaxy to reveal recent atomic gas inflow that triggered a star formation burst, suggesting GRB hosts are key to studying recent gas accretion.
Contribution
First FIR line observations of a GRB host galaxy demonstrate recent atomic gas inflow as a trigger for star formation, linking gas accretion to GRB host properties.
Findings
High [CII]/FIR and [OI]/FIR ratios indicate recent gas inflow.
[OI] emission is concentrated near the GRB site, suggesting localized gas density increase.
The galaxy shows signs of recent star formation enhancement within tens of Myr.
Abstract
We have recently suggested that gas accretion can be studied using host galaxies of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs). We obtained the first ever far-infrared (FIR) line observations of a GRB host, namely Herschel/PACS resolved [CII] 158 um and [OI] 63 um spectroscopy, as well as APEX CO(2-1) and ALMA CO(1-0) observations of the GRB 980425 host. It has elevated [CII]/FIR and [OI]/FIR ratios and higher values of star formation rate (SFR) derived from line ([CII], [OI], Ha) than from continuum (UV, IR, radio) indicators. [CII] emission exhibits a normal morphology, peaking at the galaxy center, whereas [OI] is concentrated close to the GRB position and the nearby Wolf-Rayet region. The high [OI] flux indicates high radiation field and gas density. The [CII]/CO luminosity ratio of the GRB 980425 host is close to the highest values found for local star-forming galaxies. Its CO-derived molecular gas…
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